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fME AMERICAN WAY \
'Ofimusr
r?m_ -\y$P J #A CAPITALIST IS AW
*..___. 1 mu WH0 KNOWS HE
MUST PLEASE OTHERS
BEFORE THEY'LL BUY
HIS SERVICES?
/0&sa.i!f3B^
V 'SOfclAUST SEEKS.
PAYMENT FROM THOSE
who Would not
willingly give it
to . mm through
government, direct
theft or 'loafing
on the job.*
/Vol. 40 — No. 48
2 Sections — IX) Pages
NORTH CANTON OHIO, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 17, 1966
Apt Definitions
Today Is Your Lucky Day
How many people do you know who act as though today
were unlucky? Who fritter away today and let all the important: work pile up for tomorrow? Perhaps it. is a good
l-hMg'torfeel "that the sun will shine on tomorrow and that
'—^idrtvine will attend your every activity — but why not
j-deHb enjoy the good when it comes? |
my grandmother always Used to darn the largest hole
first. She said it. made the work go faster to feel that every- j
thng else she had to do was easier than what she was
dqmg. And that can be applied to the work any of lis hav*
. Virgil Fisher
Society, receives a • che^clt," ft>ri$1.000 from repre
(left, to right), Dr. David ffVif achtel, Dale Kitz
Bachtel and Mr. Norris. werefphairman and ass
for the club's recent. Second /^.nnual Greater C
grounds for the benefit 61 the. Cancer Society. O
two-day event in 68 various classes. The club e
sponsors, exhibitors and the general public for
(left), president of the Stark County Cancer
entatives of the Plain Ruritan Club. They are
niller, club president, and William Norris. Dr.
stant chairman-program director, respectively,
tnton Benefit Horse Show staged at the fair-
ver 400 entries from eight states showed in the
xtended appreciation to news media, advertisors,
making this donation to Cancer research possible.
From Foreign Tongues
America's pride and confidence in themselves as a
people of unlimited ability has served the nation well.
Generally speaking, Americans feel sure that they can solve
any problem, social or technological. It is a popular assum >
tion, too, that cultural development within our borders will
at the very least keep pace with the best elsewhere in the
world.
This national characteristic has played no small part in
our advancement. It has been a great stimulus to our e.on-
omy, -and to the development of institutions; it has kept
us pretty much in the vanguard of human progress. It also
is partly to blame, however, for a certain provincialism in
our outlook.
The high store we set by our own culture; has, for example, tended to make us less eager to learn what the rest
of the world is thinking and creating. lOne; reflection of this
Is that we support comparatively little translating of foreign books and cultural publications.
It is good news that the Ford Foundation has provided
money to establish a national translation center at the University of Texas. A substantial grant will makei possible
conipiissions of translation of selected literary works; it
will-provide fellowships for writers interested in this field;
",it Vfill support an information service on translators and
works that ought to be translated.
';'. This is not all that needs to be done. Hopefully, the
work of the Texas center will encourage other universities
to augment .their work in this field. In time the public will
! greatly benefit as writing published in other languages
becomes generally available in Engjish.
Oceanic Litterbugs
Man will live on the ocean floor some day — but he
may; have; to clean it up first. Underwater eixplorers forsee
permanent laboratories under the ocean, mining operations
on ihe continental shelf, and a deep-diving submarine that
"Mil- explore the lower reaches of the seas. They also report
that the ocean floor is full of junk.
. The world's, continental shelves hold an estimated 85
perw. cent of the, ocean's riches that; man wants to exploit.
, .Thus by working at depths no greater than 600 feet, underwater experts can greatly extend the range of available
:%a^UEral resources.
-«.:-4'i^it human beings have for centuries, intentionally and
accidentally, used the ocean as a vast dumping grounds.
■Thus it" is not always the; pristine wonderland seen in natural history movies.. One experienced diver recalls his first
trip tb'.'the bottom especially well because he landed beside
a s^read^-out newspaper.
-y :t This collection of discarded material is doubtless not
enough to hamper undersea operations. It might even make
tfie ocean seen! a bit less formidable and mysterious, for the
lj'ttgrbug's; mess is an infallable sign that someone has been
th#e before. But whoever lives beneath the sea, in that
/prjedicted future,,,may face a cleanup job if he: doesn't want
ihi^"«ra(t'ery surroundings to resemble a junkyard* . __.__
Voting Oddities
Is Paul Perkins
Topic at Rotary
Vets to See
Local Elks %uau' Sunday
-" 'T ' *
The Hawaiian "luau" staged, so successfully by North
Canton Elks Lodge 2029 inja e June, is in for three repeat
performances this week-' Th# cast of 60 lodge members and
their wives were to don costumes for an 8 p.m. show for
Harter Bank employees tonfeht at the club. Sunday morning' at 11:30 a caravan of So cars will carry the cast and
backstage workers to ClevelMnd where they'll put the show
on at the Wade Park and 'Brecksville Veterans Hospitals,
at 2 and 7 p.m. y '
'?;
More than 400 persons applauded the show when it wayN
originally offered in June. The
90-minute 16-act musical features !
a 14-voice choral group, eigljt
Lady Elks billed as the "Sophisticates" and a line of elgftt
"hula girls." :■■'£>
£-•-.•*: .---.*~--r--.r.*&-een on patrol seeking those violators of the bonnet contest.
Men have been required to grow
l beard or buy a shaving permit
jince June 1.
Violators are subject to arrest
and have been tried in the Kangaroo court of Honorary Mayor
P.O. Heisler each Thursday at
7:30 p.m. in the fire station. Souvenirs of the celebration are on
sale there.
Proceeds of the sesquicentennial will go to the fire depart*
ment.
Frederick L. Kavanaugh
Frederick L. Kavanaugh, D.O.
has opened offices at 1413 Portage St. NW, coming to North
Canton from Grove City, Pa.
Dr. Kavanaugh, an osteopathic
physician and surgeon, will handle a general practice. His new
building has facilities for electrocardiography, physical therapy,
obstetrics, general medicine and
minor surgery.
A graduate of Glens Falls N.Y.
High School, he graduated from
Springfield College in Springfield,
Mass., in 1954 where he studied
on a J. P. Morgan Academic
Scholarship, was a student assistant in chemistry and active
in varsity football and basketball.
He was awarded a National
Osteopathic Scholarship in 1954
and graduated from the Philadelphia College of Osteopathy in
1958. His internship was at Bash-
line Rossman Hospital in Grove
City, Pa...
He has practiced in "Grove City
for seven years and for five
years was team physician for the
Grove City College football
squad.
At Bashline Memorial Hospital
he would have been chief of staff-
elect for the coming year. He
served as vice chief of staff last
year, was chairman of tlie intern
training program and secretary-
treasurer of the board of direc
tors for two terms.
He has taken post graduate
courses in interanl medicine,
surgical seminars, respiratory
diseases, fertility control and osteopathic medicine.
He is a member of Cedar
Lodge No. 800, F. & A.M.. and
the Ancient Accepted Scottish
Rite 32nd Degree in New Castle,
Pa. He holds membership in the
Society of Philatelic Americans
and the American Contract
Bridge League.
Dr. Kavanaugh resides at 1928
Amarillo Dr. NW with his wife,
Peggy and four children, Frederick, 8, Kimberly, 6, and two-
year-old twins, Diana Lynn and
Cynthia Leigh.
TRYING TO "WARM-UP." A chilly dip after an early
morning rain on Monday didn't dampen .the spirits of these
synchronized swimmers as director. Cihdy Cdrbett took them
through their paces in finale practice. With the annual water
show slated for." August 26-27, the girls have yet another week
-to -polish their numbers far-the-aquatic musicale,-«'